Judge Lets Sony Go After PS3 Jailbreaker's PayPal Account

from the seriously? dept

Sony’s ridiculous and over-aggressive lawsuit against George Hotz (Geohot) for jailbreaking the PS3 keeps reaching new absurd levels. The latest is that the magistrate judge, who seems to be rubber stamping most of Sony’s requests, is allowing the company to subpoena Paypal for Geohot’s account records. We’ve already discussed how she’s allowing subpoenas for visitors to Geohot’s website, as well as for whoever watched the YouTube video he put up about the jailbreak. Sony claims it needs access to his Paypal records to prove that people in California may have donated. They want that so that they can establish California as the proper jurisdiction for hearing the case. Frankly, this is ridiculous. First, who donated to Geohot should not be even remotely meaningful in determining the proper jurisdiction for the case. Where Hotz is located should outweigh any donor locations. Second, shouldn’t the judge be somewhat concerned with the privacy aspects here? In giving up Geohot’s Paypal info, isn’t this exposing the info of anyone who might have donated, without them having the ability to stop it?

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Companies: paypal, sony

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Comments on “Judge Lets Sony Go After PS3 Jailbreaker's PayPal Account”

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138 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: remember its not just PS3's

Is this really that an insightful of a comment? It receives an insightful mark just because it’s near the top? I think this post is evidence that Mike’s whole insightful design needs work.

Sorry, I mean absolutely no disrespect to spike, I always make obvious and obviously non-insightful comments all the time, there is nothing wrong with making a non-insightful comment.

Anonymous Coward says:

First, who donated to Geohot should not be even remotely meaningful in determining the proper jurisdiction for the case. Where Hotz is located should outweigh any donor locations.

Do you not understand how jurisdiction is determined? Your attempts to badmouth any and all attempts to enforce IP laws would have more sway if you indicated that you even understood the reasoning behind the actions that you’re badmouthing. Try explaining what the theory is, and then explain how you disagree with it. Give us some analysis.

Second, shouldn’t the judge be somewhat concerned with the privacy aspects here? In giving up Geohot’s Paypal info, isn’t this exposing the info of anyone who might have donated, without them having the ability to stop it?

Same comment. Perhaps an explanation of how financial information is turned over in infringement cases as a matter of course, and then an argument about how the reasoning there is flawed. Otherwise, you just appear to be disagreeing because you don’t like the outcome. You’re working backwards. Walk us through you’re analysis. Explain to us what the status quo is, the reasoning behind it, and then you’re reasoning for why it’s wrong.

Just a suggestion.

Michael (profile) says:

Re: Re:

“Do you not understand how jurisdiction is determined?”

Please explain how you think it works. Seriously, I would like to understand why you think it makes sense to determine jurisdiction based on where people who donated live.

“Perhaps an explanation of how financial information is turned over in infringement cases as a matter of course”

This is pretty clear cut. Even if you can come up with a compelling reason that Sony (remember, this is not a criminal case) should have GeoHot’s financial information, how can you justify giving them a list of names of people not involved in the case – particularly without giving them any opportunity to oppose the request. Regardless of what this is doing to GeoHot’s right’s, there are clear privacy concerns for the people not (currently) being sued. They should be protected but are not even allowed a representative here.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Explain to us what the status quo is, the reasoning behind it, and then you’re reasoning for why it’s wrong.

That is unlikely to happen. I think you hit the nail on the head with this one: Mike doesn’t like what is going on, and as a result, anything that happens is somehow bad or unfair or somehow special to Geohot.

Mike, news flash: The guy appears to have broken the law. ony is not only within their rights to go after him, they are well within their rights to use all of the available means the legal system puts at their disposal to do so. I suspect Sony is looking at his paypal account to confirm jurisdiction, getting the case into a state (like Cali) where their lawyers practice. I wouldn’t be shocked if they are also looking to see if there is a “commercial” angle to this, or even looking at the money flow to see who else is part of the deal.

I am sorry you don’t like Sony’s actions. But you know they are legal. You often support and defend pirate / torrent sites rights to exist and operate as a result of small cracks in various laws. Don’t be upset when the other side uses those laws the swat the flies.

Gwiz (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

But I thought that circumventing the technological protections in order to reverse engineer software could be considered fair use under the DMCA as long as you are reverse engineering to get “interoperability” between programs.

Wouldn’t this be a case of that? He was trying go get his PS3 to talk to his Linux programs.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

Sorry that is not in the current incredibly short and pathetic list of exceptions. Note that even making backup copies of your own personally bought DVD’s is technically a violation of the DMCA.

Section 1201(b) was purposefully written so that circumventing use restrictions is not unlawful. This preserves fair use.

Richard (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:


Wouldn’t this be a case of that? He was trying go get his PS3 to talk to his Linux programs.
..
Sorry that is not in the current incredibly short and pathetic list of exceptions. Note that even making backup copies of your own personally bought DVD’s is technically a violation of the DMCA.

But GeoHotz was not “circumventing a technological protection measure that effectively controls access to a protected work” – since there is no protected work in a PS3 running LInux!

So how was he breaking the law?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Re:

Probably the last thing we would expect to see on the PS3, after 3 years it seems legendary iPhone hacker George Hotz (Geohot) has managed to crack the PS3 security in under a month (Geohot was the first person to unlock the iPhone). He has posted on his blog that he has full hypervisor access and read/write access to the entire system memory. He also says that this is not patchable and plans to reveal the method soon. There is still more work to be done according to Geohot.

http://www.ps3hax.net/2010/01/ps3-finally-hacked-by-geohot/#axzz1Gt4OAI8h

Sort of self explanatory, isn’t it?

Gwiz (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:6 Re:

Sort of self explanatory, isn’t it?

No, not really. If GeoHot’s intentions (don’t know – guessing here) were to replace the Other OS option then what he describes in his blog sounds like the first steps towards that. Still looks like circumventing the technological protections in order to gain interoperability between the PS3’s OS and Linux programs to me.

Gwiz (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:8 Re:

Actually, his target was the “decryption keys”. Sounds pretty much like a guy trying to circumvent security, no?

Perhaps. But was it a step towards restoring the Other OS feature?

Look, I don’t know all the specifics of this case. But it seems to me that the intent of the exception described in the text of the DMCA law at subsection (f) was included by congress for a situation exactly like this one.

Richard (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:6 Re:

Sort of self explanatory, isn’t it?

No.

I repeat – where is the protected work?

There are many perfectly legitimate reasons to do what GeoHotz has done – such as to allow user written games to utilise the graphics hardware. We have a whole labful of PS3’s that are sitting idle because of this stupid barrier.

Richard (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:8 Re:

To clarify – you cannot stop anyone from doing something just by inserting some “protection s/w” in their path. Legally the software has to be protecting something that is entitled to copyright protection against illegal copying.
You are confusing the fact that occasionally such s/w can impede an otherwise legal act with the fiction that you can legally stop any act by inserting “protection s/w” in its path even if such s/w is not in fact protecting anything.

HothMonster says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Re:

The effectively controls part is what most people use to defend themselves I mean what is this kid like 20? Obviously very effective if a bunch of kids can rip it wide open.

However your interpitation is wrong he went around the ineffective measures so he could install linux, because those measures prevented him from doing that. The ps3 systems as a whole is the protected work

HothMonster says:

Re: Re: Re:7 Re:

“The ps3 systems as a whole is the protected work
So how does Geohot’s hack enable you to produce illegal copies of “the PS3 system as a whole?”” [i think the question mark still goes in the quotes even though the quote isn’t a question]

It doesn’t. I was referring to this part of the DCMA “circumventing a technological protection measure that effectively controls access to a protected work”
you don’t have to copy or produce anything. By circumventing the protection on it you are already in violation. Again though any controls that can be circumvented obviously were not effective.

“In any case – as a utility article – the ps3 system as a whole is not eligible to copyright protection.”

Its a fishy loophole as I understand it but it goes something like this. The hardware that makes your ps3 is a unique configuration (not to mention the proprietary parts inside) in addition it requires unique software to run. If you installed the ps3 operating system on a dell computer, or a xbox360, nothing useful would happen. If you installed windows on a ps3 it wouldn’t work. (otherOS works in conjunction with the ps3 OS, in other words you cant strip all the code out of a ps3 then install an operating system). Obviously the OS is copyrightable, im pretty sure the hardware configuration is as well. So in the eyes of the law the ps3 is not a computer running Sony’s code its a special machine that is made up of parts you might find in a computer that runs a special code and it makes up one whole protected unit.

“http://www1.edge-online.com/news/british-court-ps2-not-a-pc”

Its old news I know, but it reflects what I am talking about. I believe they were able to get ps3s shipped to America as computers which is funny because in one of the geohot complaints they state that it is not a computer. [citation needed; if someone links the pleadings again I’m sure i can find it]

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

You often support and defend pirate / torrent sites rights to exist and operate as a result of small cracks in various laws. Don’t be upset when the other side uses those laws the swat the flies.

That’s right. And these aren’t even cracks in the law being exploited. This is just standard operating procedure. Mike appears to only disagree with the procedure because it’s being used against a pirate. What it really boils down to is that Mike thinks piracy should not be illegal. That’s fine if he thinks that. It would be a lot clearer for everyone if he just admitted it though.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

I’m seriously wondering what your end-game is with the constant FUD about “Mike supporting piracy” is.

I mean, you say it every single chance you get…for what? Let’s assume that you even manage to get the majority of people who read this site to believe your claims…what then? Is Mike suddenly supposed to turn into this cackling mad villain with some grand scheme to take over the world? Are we all supposed to run screaming from the website in abject horror as we realize we’ve been “deceived” for years?

And by the way…Mike doesn’t think Piracy should be illegal. He’s said as much multiple times. You do a quick, 10 second search and you’ll find multiple articles on why he thinks Piracy should be acceptable. Of course, he doesn’t believe that you should break the law just because you think the law is wrong…which is probably what you’re trying to imply.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

Mike’s issue that that piracy is required to make all his other ideas function. The whole “cwf” crap is basic on a universe where all IP is pirated at 100% rate, and everyone is out selling speaking tours, t-shirts, and mini-putt games in order to afford to make more IP to have forcibly given away by “fans”.

It’s a series of business models predicated on widespread piracy.

See, without the hollywood movies, the popular label artist music, and commercial software being pirated and made available, most people wouldn’t have P2P software on their systems. Why would they? So they can share the latest Cory Smith ditty? It’s a non-starter, and Mike knows it. The “good stuff” is what keeps the pump primed and keeps people focused on the torrent sites, which permits the rest of his “widely shared” business strategies can work.

See, if new artists actually had to pay bandwidth to offer potential new fans downloads of their music, most of them wouldn’t do it. They couldn’t support the costs of the downloads. Business-wise, it wouldn’t be a very good bottom line idea.

So Mike ends up in the place where he has to attack every successful defense of copyright (or patents for that matter) because enforcement of copyright laws makes his business models look non-functional.

Mike will never say he supports piracy. He just needs it to be relevant.

HothMonster says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

No he just knows piracy isn’t going anywhere. You think anything will ever effectivly stop piracy? I’m sure it will happen the day after we win the war on drugs and end global terrorism.

His models just depend on people accepting this fact and realizing that if people make someting other people like they will make money. But they won’t do it by pissing off the people they want money from.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

“ee, without the hollywood movies, the popular label artist music, and commercial software being pirated and made available, most people wouldn’t have P2P software on their systems. Why would they? So they can share the latest Cory Smith ditty? It’s a non-starter, and Mike knows it. The “good stuff” is what keeps the pump primed and keeps people focused on the torrent sites, which permits the rest of his “widely shared” business strategies can work.”

You keep confusing Hollywood with the “Good Stuff”. Please stop doing that.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

Hollywood doesn’t make good stuff? I guess I should stop watching this DVD I have on, since you say it’s bad.

The poster you’re responding to has a very good point: Mike profits from piracy. From his business to his blog, piracy powers the machine. That might explain a lot.

Mike Masnick (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Re:

Mike profits from piracy. From his business to his blog, piracy powers the machine

For someone who constantly claims that I lie and spread FUD, you sure do an awful lot of pure bullshitting yourself.

The above statement that I “profit from piracy” is a pure lie, stated with knowledge that it is a lie. I’m amazed that you would so blatantly lie, though it explains why you are posting anonymously.

If you want to make up shit, go somewhere else.

Jeremy Lyman (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:6 Re:

Hey Mike, I have a hard time keeping all these cowards straight. I know their icons are different but they all just blend together after a while. How about assigning them a unique random (potentially embarrassing) name till they register and pick a handle themselves. You know, like “pony princess wishmaster”, “whine machine 24”, or “the green annoyance”.

Just a suggestion.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:6 Re:

I am sorry, how is it a lie?

Your business models in music are based on free distribution. Without P2P, online distribution would not be free, the whole “infinite distribution” and “no marginal cost” arguments would all go out the window, and you would be left with very little as your starting point for many of the discussions.

Your business models are based on the piracy distribution network being available to others, and to piggy back off of it. Directly or indirectly, you push models that profit from copyright violation. You don’t support piracy, you just propose making a living off of using it’s services.

Without piracy and it’s mechanisms, you wouldn’t have the starting point of much of your business proposals. You wouldn’t be out there hating on a music industry selling digital music at 99 cents, because there wouldn’t be a “free” alternative.

Sorry Mike, but you may not agree, but it is clear that much of your philosophy and business ideas are based on piracy existing, continuing, and growing. You might not like it, you might not agree, but that is what it appears to be from here.

I didn’t make shit up. I just said something you don’t like.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:9 Re:

P2P and the Internet go together like, well, HTML and the Internet. Without Internet protocols then you wouldn’t really have an Internet.

Online distribution is free. That’s the reality. The point is to accept reality and work from there. Something you seem to refuse to do. Why? I have no idea? Why don’t you tell us?

HothMonster says:

Re: Re: Re:7 Re:

So your telling me Mike is looking at the state of the world today and the technology that exists and expressing ideas for business plans around it? Thats CRAZY!

If he were an upstanding gentleman instead the brainwashing raptorphile scoundrel that he is he would stick his head in the sand and design business plans as if it where 1989.

We all know that admitting something exists = supporting. Which is why I don’t wear condoms because that would mean I’m an STD supporter.

Also the daycare I run only has 3 walls and anyone can come “hang out” with the kids. Because certainly if I took into account, when designing my business, the possibility that the children I am suppose to protect could be kidnapped and/or raped that would mean I am in support of child abduction and molestation.

/sarc
the backasswards logic in this paragraph is just too good to not mention/

“Sorry Mike, but you may not agree, but it is clear that much of your philosophy and business ideas are based on piracy existing, continuing, and growing. You might not like it, you might not agree, but that is what it appears to be from here.”

In other words: Mike you may not agree with how I interpret your ideas, but the way I misinterpret you is clear. Your philosophy and business ideas are based on piracy existing, continuing, and growing. You might not like breaking the law you might not agree with how I see things. But that is how I see things therefore that is the way things are. Even though I asked you and you said otherwise and you have never expressly stated the ideas and values I attribute to you they must be true because I interpret that they are the ideas and values you hold. Obviously you deny them because….um….the conspiracy to…ummm speak poorly of…um things you don’t agree with. WHICH IS AN ATROCITY. You will agree with anything people do unless they are “bad” people then you do what ever you can to not agree with them even if that means never being able to make any sense. Fox news will tell you who the bad people are.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:8 Re:


In other words: Mike you may not agree with how I interpret your ideas, but the way I misinterpret you is clear.

Ahh, such a fail! You tried so hard, but you missed the point. You went all around the point, and tried to discredit my opinion by adding stupidity. Too bad.

No, Mike’s business models work on things like “infinite distrubution” and “no marginal costs”, but those exist only when people are sharing (via P2P or other means) on a scale that matches actual existing distribution. Sneakernet isn’t fast enough or vast enough. Mike’s ideas need P2P with the majority of people using it to work. The only thing that keeps the P2P programs up and sharing is pirated content.

People don’t create special pirated Cory Smith sites, do they?

HothMonster says:

Re: Re: Re:9 Re:

Ill play, cause its fun and i am sooooo bored.

“….but those exist only when people are sharing….Mike’s ideas need P2P with the majority of people using it to work. The only thing that keeps the P2P programs up and sharing is pirated content.”

Whats a majority of people? So since piracy works a majority of people use it now? So a majority of Americans are pirates. America is ruled by the people. Therefore piracy is now legal.

p2p=person to person. You know how many people it takes to work? 2.

Same with bittorrent really all it takes it one person uploading and one person downloading. Its faster with many people on the system but 5 or 10 people is more then enough, as long as one has a decent upload speed, to quickly share a song or a book.

So really as long as I want to give something away all I need is a website(any business or artist should have one already), an internet connection (if there isn’t demand for my “whatever” and its larger then a few megs I need a business class connection, unless you have Verizon they give residential users real upload speeds), and someone who wants it. So the artist crippling costs are what again? Lets see to share my bands music I would have to:
1. Write songs(did that anyway)
2. Play songs(did that anyway)
3. Record songs(did that anyway)
4. Put songs on my computer($$$$$$$$$)
5. Tell people where they can get my songs(“Thank you for coming, check out our website and drive safe)
6. Pay for my home internet connection.
7. Watch as either 1 or 1,000,000 people download my song for the same cost to me

You realize that because people are downloading X(which is a illegal version of something) that doesn’t increase the speed I can, or my ability to, share Y(which is legal). You realize that bittorrent isn’t all hosted off some server held in some evil geniuses basement(don’t go in MM’s basement) The client exists, its free. It requires nothing people don’t already have. Before you jump around about business class internet comcast overs a package with more than sufficent upload speeds for $99.99 a month which is like 15 dollars more than i pay for my home connection now.

So if all piracy went away tonight and no one ever downloaded anything illegal ever again I could still share anything legal I wanted for the same price it would cost me today, next to nothing. There is no p2p program the needs to be kept up and running. If i have the software and you have the software boom thats it we are a network. Stopping piracy doesnt get rid of the software it already exists and requires no maintenance.

Please find one sentence to respond to and ignore the rest of post, thank you

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:7 Re:

“Your business models in music are based on free distribution.”

Free distribution and piracy are not the same thing. There is such thing as free distribution of CC released content and it won’t be piracy.

“Directly or indirectly, you push models that profit from copyright violation.”

No, he pushes models that make it legal for others to use ones work without illegally infringing, such as releasing the works under a CC license and profiting from other things. That’s not encouraging infringement. Your dishonesty here lends no credibility to your position.

Mike Masnick (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

So Mike ends up in the place where he has to attack every successful defense of copyright (or patents for that matter) because enforcement of copyright laws makes his business models look non-functional.

Hmm? This is so clueless as to be laughable. The businesses I talk about do not rely on piracy. They work fine without piracy. They have nothing to do with piracy. So, not sure where this claim comes from other than ignorance.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

Actually, most of them wouldn’t work at all without piracy, because many of them depend on P2P technology to really work out on the distribution side.

P2P exists at it’s current level only because of piracy. Most people wouldn’t bother if all they could get was garage bands and Nina Paley movies. Without critical mass, P2P doesn’t function efficiently. The whole “free” infinite distribution thing depends greatly on functional P2P, and everyone being part of it. Without that, it falls apart.

So once you stop being able to just give everything away (because giving it away would now actually cost something), most of your business models (in music and other areas) tend to fall apart. Without P2P, it no longer makes financial sense.

So when you kick that leg out from under the table, the rest of it falls down.

Do you understand where I am going?

Mike Masnick (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Re:

P2P exists at it’s current level only because of piracy. Most people wouldn’t bother if all they could get was garage bands and Nina Paley movies. Without critical mass, P2P doesn’t function efficiently. The whole “free” infinite distribution thing depends greatly on functional P2P, and everyone being part of it. Without that, it falls apart.

Look, if you don’t know how P2P works, you really shouldn’t comment.

But, since I know you know how P2P really works, and instead you’re just making shit up, I’ll stop this conversation now.

Do you understand where I am going?

Yes. You think that by misrepresenting me, technology, economics and the law, you might get a rise out of someone.

How’s that working out for you?

HothMonster says:

Re: Re: Re:6 Re:

Hes got me Mike, im soo butthurt and frustrated. Why wont he conform to my world view.

OMG his ignorance is just so infuriating i cant stand to not reply.

Oh wait im bored, have no work to do, and typing posts in word at least looks better to passerbys then playing minesweeper or browsing the internet.

Sorry Mike, this slump will end I will stop feeding your trolls. Hopefully soon.

HothMonster says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Re:

“Actually, most of them wouldn’t work at all without piracy, because many of them depend on P2P technology to really work out on the distribution side.”

And when piracy goes away obviously all the technology that people used to pirate will go away too. I imagine ICE will confiscate it.

“P2P exists at it’s current level only because of piracy. Most people wouldn’t bother if all they could get was garage bands and Nina Paley movies”

Cause if piracy never existed people wouldn’t have to invent better ways to share large amounts of information. If sure we would get all our WOW patches and linux builds by mailing cds like AOL did before all this evil tech was born. Also updates to massive server farms, i.e. facebook and google, would be done by a guy putting a floppy disc in each machine. Not to mention the evil BBC how dare they use pirate tech to share their videos and podcasts, it should come by carrier pigeon.

“The whole “free” infinite distribution thing depends greatly on functional P2P, and everyone being part of it.”

If everyone has to be a part of it, and your not a part of it how does it continue? OMG your a pirate.

“So once you stop being able to just give everything away (because giving it away would now actually cost something), most of your business models (in music and other areas) tend to fall apart. Without P2P, it no longer makes financial sense.”

Again, admitting piracy happened and using any tech that pirates also use makes you a piracy supporter. Thats why I don’t use the internet.

“So when you kick that leg out from under the table, the rest of it falls down.”

So if piracy, and the technologies it grew, had never happened your ideas about how to make money when people can pirate your goods instead of buy them would be useless.

“Do you understand where I am going?”

Either your going back to 1980 to stop the internet from being born or your going in logic hole and out another.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Geohot MAY have broken a law that’s probably unconstitutional (by violating the part of the DMCA that says what you can or cannot do with your own property in your own home), but it was in respons to Sony DEFINITELY breaking the law (by removing the “Other OS’ option Sony has CLEARLY committed fraud), you could even argue that Geohot was repairing functionality the Sony willfully broke, which, if we are to use Sony or RIAA logic would amount to $500 of damage per PS3, x about 40MM PS3s = about $20B in damage total, which I would say is a fairly big crime, regardless of what state you’re in

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

If you own a PS3 and thing Sony committed fraud, sue them. I doubt you will get far, because part of your purchase agreement allows for modifications of system software during updates, and that may add or remove features from the software for security reasons.

Sorry, but your flailing argument doesn’t stand up.

Richard (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

If you own a PS3 and thing Sony committed fraud, sue them. I doubt you will get far, because part of your purchase agreement allows for modifications of system software during updates, and that may add or remove features from the software for security reasons.

The purchase agreement cannot override the various trade descriptions and other consumer protection laws that make Sony’s actions illegal.

The reason such a case won’t get far is the way that these laws are usually interpreted when one of the parties is a major corporation.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

Sony can easily show an overriding need to secure the product against hackers, cheaters, and scammers. Features may be added or removed for security purposes, and it would be very hard for a court of law to tell Sony to ignore a security hole in order to make a small percentage of users happy.

I suspect that this would at best make some lawyers some money and get everyone a $5 off coupon for your next game purchase, as the OS option likely wouldn’t be the reason most people bought a PS3.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

Looking at the motion to dismiss, that was granted though with leave to amend, the judge is not buying the breach of express warranty argument. The judge notes:

Plaintiffs are not suggesting that their PS3 systems lacked the other OS feature when they acquired them. Plaintiffs must therefore either allege that Sony made some express representations as to the continued availability of that feature, or they will have to show both that there were implied representations as to continued availability and that an express warranty claim may legally proceed even where it is based in part on such implied representations.

The court was similarly dismissive with the implied breach of warranty claims:

Accordingly, the implied warranty claims must be dismissed. Although it is not clear how
plaintiffs may be able to cure the privity problem, leave to amend will be granted.

He also outright dismisses the other five claims. I see nothing to indicate that there’s a lot of meat on this bone..

Richard (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Re:

Like I said – this is the way the law gets interpreted when one player is a major corporation.

You are right that this is what usually happens – that does not mean it is in accord with the spirit of the law as the general public believes it to be.

There is a word for this state of affairs. It is called corruption.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:6 Re:

“Like I said – this is the way the law gets interpreted when one player is a major corporation.”

The reason partly has to do with the fact that judges are/were lawyers, corporations hire a lot of lawyers that engage in many lawsuits, lawsuits keep judges employed and so to encourage more of these lawsuits, judges tend to favor the corporations that keep them employed.

HothMonster says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

Yeah let’s see here, they had a small security hole that allowed for a pain in the ass modification that required a piece of 3rd party hardware. They sued the makers of the hardware, won all their product and the makers agreed not to release the code they used to make the product.

Sony then removes otherOS after realizing that it was needed for the exploit. This pisses off people who had no interest in pirating. These pissed off people put in a couple months work and rip the whole system open with a easy mod any 16 year old with access to google can install and use to pirate. That code is out and nothing they can do can get rid of it.

Seems everything is working out for them

Richard (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

Sony can easily show an overriding need to secure the product against hackers, cheaters, and scammers. Features may be added or removed for security purposes, and it would be very hard for a court of law to tell Sony to ignore a security hole in order to make a small percentage of users happy.

None of those things is really an overriding need. The overriding need behind all this is something that is not directly legally protectable (arguably it is illegal since it amounts to a restraint of legitimate trade). The real motivation is Sony’s business model – which is to sell the consoles at a loss and make up (more than) the difference by controlling (and taxing) the game developers.
There is no legal mechanism to do this directly – which is why Sony resorts to all these contorted arguments about the license agreement and the DMCA.

The fact is that there is simply no need to “protect” the PS3 software from copying – because it is well protected by an unbreakable dongle system – the console itself!

What Sony is actually trying to protect is their right to act as gatekeeper to the PS3 development community – which is a right that the do not legally have.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

“for security reasons.”

I don’t think Sony did it for security reasons. IIRC, I remember reading earlier posts of people saying they think it had something to do with them later not wanting people to use it as an OS because they’re selling it as a loss and if too many people end up using it as an OS (kinda like how the govt did) and didn’t buy games for it (which is how they plan to make back their money), they will lose money. That’s why they flipped out when the government started using it as a cheaper solution, they started revoking the OS feature around the same time that the govt started using it and Sony flipped out. Based on the governments use, they may have figured that more people may end up using it than they had initially planned.

Besides, I don’t think any of their actions make it any more secure. If someone wants to hack it, they’ll find a way to hack it regardless, since hacking it requires some effort with or without a linux installation. and I doubt those who want to hack it for cheating purposes will bother to install linux on it to hack it, though they might use the loophole that was used to install linux on it to do something much simpler. Not that a linux installation would really be a practical hack, I’m sure a much simpler hack is far more likely to be used. To hack it via the linux installation one would first have to install linux and then make the Linux software correctly interpret the game code without glitches. Running a game directly on top of a relatively bulky linux operating system is processor inefficient and will tend to lead to all sorts of bugs and incompatibility problems. I’m sure Sony knows this. Not that it can’t be done, but people who want to hack it will likely find a far more direct, efficient, and simpler way of hacking it that doesn’t involve such a huge modification of the firmware in ways that can lead to problems that require work arounds and ways that need one to practically re-write a lot of Sony’s operating code in a way that the Linux operating system can better understand, a way that won’t conflict with whatever the Linux operating system is doing. What Sony is doing has little to nothing to do with security, regardless of what the non-tech savy lawyers claim.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

“though they might use the loophole that was used to install linux on it to do something much simpler.”

(not that they would need to see this linux hack to be able to find the loophole. If they are capable of figuring out how to make the Linux OS emulate a PlayStation game, they are more likely to figure out a way to use the loophole to find a simpler hack. and their ability to use the loophole to find this simpler hack probably means they probably don’t need anyone to tell them about the loophole for them to find it themselves).

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

(and the above is especially true if Sony’s source firmware code is closed source, which I suspect it is. Someone who wants to hack it wants to use Sony’s code directly installed on the unit as much as possible with as little modification as possible instead of having to try and figure out how that code should interact with a Linux operating in order to properly and indirectly interact with Sony’s hardware. They don’t have the source code to easily re-write a Linux equivalent, it’s simply not a practical solution. The techs here on techdirt know this, but the lawyers are either too stupid or willfully giving everyone a hard time).

G Thompson (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

f you own a PS3 and thing Sony committed fraud, sue them. I doubt you will get far,

Class action against Sony over removal of Other OS to go ahead [Groklaw Feb, 2011]

Shows how much you really read, listen or understand then about this whole case and the other case that is a major, MAJOR problem for Sony at the moment and that has major ramifications on Sony v Hotz since Hotz’s lawyers will absolutely be looking seriously at the outcome and at specific allegations against Sony [SCEA]

The Amended ComplaintGroklaw, 13 Mar 2011

Amended Complaint filedGroklaw, 13 Mar 2011 Para’s 159 to 161 will be EXTREMELY interesting to Hotz’s legal team

For other interesting LEGAL analysis of Sony v. Hotz and the class action against SCEA just go to the front page of Groklaw and scroll through.

Or you can just keep quoting erroneous suppositions, your choice

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

“for security reasons.”

and besides, for security reasons doesn’t involve trying to make the software so that a hacker using the software can less easily hack someone else. A hacker using the software that’s capable of hacking someone else can do it with or without the firmware update. For security reasons means Sony is updating the firmware on my hardware so that others can’t hack me from the outside. It’s analogous to Microsoft updating my browser or operating system so that others can’t hack me if I stumble upon a malicious website. It doesn’t involve Microsoft deleting my calculator so that it won’t help me hack others. That’s illogical and inconsistent with what most people generally expect out of security updates. Sure, an operating system calculator could help me hack others by helping me do various code calculations, but deleting my calculator doesn’t make anyone any more secure. What Sony did has nothing to do with security because it does absolutely nothing to protect me from others. It simply disables a feature that Sony promised they will deliver to me.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

Now, one may argue that Linux itself could have security loopholes that could make me vulnerable to external attacks if I use it. To that extent

A: if the Linux distribution originated and is being maintained by an external entity (ie: the open source community) then Sony should disclose that and the user should understand that Sony is not responsible for any security vulnerabilities that the Linux operating system has. Most Linux users are pretty tech savy anyways and can keep their operating systems secure, but the point is that it should be pre-understood that Sony allows Linux use as is and hence Sony is expected not to remove the feature since they advertised that the feature comes with the product.

If Sony is maintaining the Linux distribution and its security, then there is a reasonable expectation that they will provide continued security support for the feature without removing the feature. Such is an expected responsibility that Sony implicitly and reasonably took upon itself by offering the possibility of installing Linux with its operating system. Anything else is unexpected and illogical. If Sony wants to later remove the feature the very least they should do is offer a full refund to anyone requesting one on the basis that its lacking the feature (and, sure, this can lead to false refunds, but that’s part of the cost of breaking a promise and is the very least they can do).

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

(actually what Sony did is more analogous to my cell phone company deleting my cheap phone calculator on my cheap cell phone because it can potentially be used to help me calculate what needs to be calculated to hack someone. Sure, it’s possible that I can use the very primitive calculator on my primitive phone to do some of the required calculations, but it’s not an ideal tool. There are far more relevant tools out there that are far better designed for programmers, whereas my phone calculator is more designed for calculating things like recommended waitress tip and other quick calculations that you typically need for normal, on the fly daily activities. Same thing with the Linux operating system in terms of being used for hacking, it’s simply not an ideal tool).

HothMonster says:

Re: Re: Re:

you again…
dont you have anything better to do? You really hate Mike this much? Because why again? He expresses his opinion, other people come and talk about their opinions. Obviously the majority of us who come here regularly agree with most of Mike’s opinions, that’s why we come here because he writes about things that interest us and we can all vent our frustration with the world we live in. Mike doesn’t actually control anything or shape your world, he obviously doesn’t have the ears of very many people who do shape your world. He is not some expert propagandist brainwashing people, I’m sure most of the people who bookmarked this site already felt the way the do now. A couple articles and some forum posts are not going to change peoples world view and if they do that’s because they are well thought out, logical, and people have evidence in their daily lives that allow them to accept what they have learned into their world view.

I am happy to discuss topics with people who don’t agree with me as I assume most people here are, though I don’t like speaking for others. You however don’t want to discuss you make statements that you never backup and yell FUD and irrelevant at others all day. When multiple people post long responses to your objections to an idea you scroll through and pick the weakest sentence you can find and attack it. Or you just say your wrong and insult someone.

If your just trying to troll your not very good at it. Trust me I love a good troll but i definitely laugh harder at you (not at your post at YOU) then at any of the responses you generate. I’m pretty sure Mike doesn’t stay up all night really irritated by your personal insults. If you think im butthurt trust me I’m not, I’ll leave work in 12 minutes read the articles I missed on the train home and forget about this forum until I get bored at work tomorrow. A good troll gets under peoples skin and generates fear and rage your just a nuisance.

I have noticed you going through 3 day old posts and making your comments all over the place. How many pages do you have bookmarked? How often do you refresh all your posts?

We know your not a lawyer, i would bet project assistant at some shitty lawfirm to explain your westlaw access. Although you have never linked from westlaw so you might just know it exists and don’t actually have access. If you were a lawyer or as some people guess a law student you would understand that pretty much any law can be argued 8 different ways depending on the situation. We wouldn’t need lawyers if this shit was all black and white. But you come back day after day saying how we are all freetarded because we don’t see some case with the same fucked up logic you do. Or quoting 100 year old case law for internet cases. This shit has nuance boy, and a lot of it is largely unprecedented. You can’t say linking is the same as physical counterfeiting cause its not, just cause you can false logic a old case around a new idea doesn’t make you right.

Someone in here does have an agenda. It is you and your Mike bashing agenda. Is this a personal thing? Did he sleep with your girlfriend in college or pee in your water bottle or something? Cause seriously give it up, you just look more pathetic everyday. You could spend your time some much better, or at least pick a better enemy. Why not try nambla.org or the kkk, trust me they dont respond to trolling well you’ll get much better responses.

Well I’m sure you will find one or two sentences to respond to and leave rest untouched. Don’t worry its cool. Thanks for helping me kill the last 20 minutes of my day. Time to punch out.

Dont break your finger hitting F5 all night.

Chuck Norris' Enemy (deceased) (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Note that you can be anywhere to give a donation. Maybe I live in South Carolina and was visiting my mom in California, using her computer to make a Paypal donation with my account/credit card. Is giving a donation a crime (I think you will say it is in this case)? Shouldn’t the donating criminals be tried in the state of their crime? How can you prove where any of the donors where at the moment of their crime?

Gwiz (profile) says:

Question

I am curious here as to what GeoHot actually did that is getting him sued over this.

My understanding (which may not be complete or correct) is that reverse engineering of software is legal and circumventing the technological protections in order to reverse engineer the software can be considered fair use under the DMCA.

Is it simply that GeoHot shared his findings with others that has gotten him into trouble?

Steven (profile) says:

Re: Question

To the best of my understanding the DMCA does not allow for a fair use claim for circumvention. You can even be violating the law if none of your activities are illegal, but you circumvent some protections. The only legal circumventions allowed are those specifically listed by the Library of Congress.

This is outrageous, but is the law as far as I know.

HothMonster says:

Re: Question

Its legal on an iphone that is the only thing that is certain. Microsoft recently dropped a suit because it looked like it was the judge was going to declare it legal in that case as well. However sony is pushing that’s its a computer not an entertainment device which muddles things. Even though they import it as a media device cause its cheaper than importing computers but that’s another story.the fact that he made his findings public is one aspect but sony is trying to say what he did is ilegal no matter what, they are also trying to say since he started with some code others found that he is part of a conspiracy or some evil hacking ring.

TimothyAWiseman (profile) says:

Jurisdiction

I am not a lawyer, but where he received money from is quite relevant in determining proper jurisdiction.

The landmark case that set the initial precedent was International Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 U.S. 310 (1945). This has been interpreted by cases such as Asahi Metal Industry Co. v. Superior Court, 480 U.S. 102 (1987). The precise test is still somewhat open to interpretation, but the basic idea is that if you direct your business at a state then you are availing yourself of that state’s laws and therefore it is at least consistent with the Constitution for that state (or a federal court located in that state) to exercise jurisdiction.

Again I am not a lawyer, but it seems whether or not he solicited and received donations from California in connection with his work on the PS3 is very relevant to seeing if jurisdiction may be exercised there. Of course, he may still try to have it removed from that court under doctrines such as forum non conviens even if jurisdiction may be properly exercised there.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Jurisdiction

That’s right. This wikipedia article is informative: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minimum_contacts

It appears to me that Mike’s only reason for disagreeing with the procedure is because it affects negatively the trial of a suspected pirate. I doubt his concerns are that the Supreme Court’s analysis of the jurisdictional due process issues at play is somehow flawed.

Steven (profile) says:

Re: Re: Jurisdiction

I think Mike might also disagree because it defies common sense that donations coming from California should push the jurisdiction into California when the physical location of those donations had no bearing on the actions.

So we have two separate discussions; does it have a legal impact and should it have a legal impact.

Mike clearly thinks it shouldn’t (as he says “should not”). Re-reading the article I don’t get a clear sense that Mike is making a legal “does not” argument.

Personally I think it ‘should’ not matter. I lack the legal background to know if it actually does matter.

Eugene (profile) says:

Re: Re: Jurisdiction

One thing to keep in mind is that the procedure isn’t supposed to have prior bias. Wherever most of the money is coming from, that is where the trial should be held under this test (but there have been arguments made to the contrary which have provided exceptions, of course). But in this case, it’s very clear that Sony is pulling for California specifically, and will do whatever they can to bend the data to favor that state. There’s in fact nothing to suggest that donations WOULD come from California, so eying that state in particular is suspicious at best.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Jurisdiction

Please explain how you believe there are ‘minimum contacts’ sufficient to put jurisdiction in California. Having read the linked article, I am not seeing where you think minimum contacts exists.

The number one reason is because the plaintiff is in the Northern District of California. Is the jurisdictional issue even still an issue, or hasn’t the judge already rules on this?

Whisk33 says:

Re: Jurisdiction

“if you direct your business at a state then you are availing yourself of that state’s laws”

is this statement true in Geohots’ case? By placing a video on youtube one could as easily solicit Boston as the Bay Area. The logic is that the servers are based in Mountain View and therefore acceptable under Bay area jurisdiction, seems to go against how the web itself works. He is “conducting business” in NJ and if not directing his business at any particular state or area, I don’t see how your response applies. Although who gave and how much was given still seems to go against your first statement. What if he directed his solicitation at Bay Area, but more people gave from Boston? But more money came from Miami?

TimothyAWiseman (profile) says:

Re: Re: Jurisdiction

It sounds like you are assuming that jurisdiction must be proper in one and only one place, but that is not true. Again, I am not a lawyer, but most of the time jurisdiction may be proper in multiple places. It is then up to the plaintiff to decide which of those possible jurisdiction to file the case in.

If jurisdiction is being challenged as improper, then the key question is the “minimum contacts” analysis to determine if it is proper. Even if it is proper, the defendant may attempt to show that it is more appropriate through a challenge such as forum non conviens. However, when such a transfer (rather than dismissal for lack of jurisdiction) is requested the court has wide discretion and will often give the benefit of the doubt to the plaintiff.

Greevar (profile) says:

Re: Jurisdiction

You are forgetting that this is a case about an issue of federal law. If this was a California law in question, then I was agree with moving it to CA, but this is federal and should be tried in the state where the offense originated.

I agree with Whisk33’s point. What gives CA precedent over other states where donations originated from? All I can see is that they want CA because it works in their favor.

TimothyAWiseman (profile) says:

Re: Re: Jurisdiction

“What gives CA precedent over other states where donations originated from?”

California has precedent because that is where the plaintiff filed suit. I am in no way a lawyer, but at least initially the plaintiff is “the master of the claim.” and may file suit in any place where jurisdiction is proper. That does not meant that that place is the only one where they could have filed.

“All I can see is that they want CA because it works in their favor.”

Yes, precisely, that is what “forum shopping” is.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Jurisdiction

Forum shopping is an abuse of our system.

and the place that the plaintiff should have jurisdiction is the state that it incorporated itself in, not in any arbitrary state that it decides to file suit in. Some states offer better tax benefits, other states offer favorable court decisions in your favor (though I think choosing a state based on the latter is an abuse of the system and there needs to be a way of fixing that. Then again, most states tend to favor entities in their own states in opposed to foreign entities).

With your logic, if I live in California and someone else who lives in California pops my tire, I can randomly sue them in Texas (ie: if I see that I can get higher reward damage in Texas) even though neither of us have residence there nor has either of us ever stepped foot in Texas. I can just sue anyone anywhere I want. It defeats the whole purpose of jurisdiction since there is no jurisdiction if the place that the plaintiff filed suit is where the lawsuit occurs.

HothMonster says:

Re: Jurisdiction

He expressly stated when he released the codes that he wasn’t doing this for money and did not want any donations. However he had a paypal account were people could donate, maybe they did it because of this or the iphone hack or any of the other projects he was working that people wanted him to finish. Of course we all know that no one gave him money cause they could pirate games now because pirates don’t pay for anything.

Flaz says:

Jurisdiction

I find this jurisdiction issue very interesting. Sony wants the PayPal accounts and intends to use the info in order to have jurisdiction in California, but what if the accounts show that the majority of the donors are from somewhere else…say Little Rock, Arkansas. Should the case move there?

Will these PayPal accounts only be used to benefit Sony or simply be disregarded if they don’t?

Anonymous Coward says:

What I want to know is where is the lawsuit against Sony for selling a product and later removing a key functional feature of that product without just compensation to the buyer?

If your car manufacture were to all the sudden take all the seats out of your car I’m sure you’d be pretty pissed about it, especially if you put new seats in it then got sued because of it.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

If your car manufacture were to all the sudden take all the seats out of your car I’m sure you’d be pretty pissed about it, especially if you put new seats in it then got sued because of it.

You own the seats in a car that you own. You’re only a licensee of the PS3 software. Bad analogy.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Atkray has a better analogy – same point.

Removing a feature that was advertised for the specific purpose of promoting the sale of a product then later removing it at whim is just a poor way to conduct business, and if not should damn well be illegal.

But like so many other things highlighted throughout TechDirt with things in regard to intellectual property the litigation surrounding it is flawed and broken.

Consumers should be the one’s who hold the majority of rights when it comes to the products they own. Even if the support of “other os” was never featured at the release of the ps3 and someone figured out how to make the hardware perform that functionality they should be well within their rights to do so.

Will you argue I don’t own the hardware either?

Richard (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

You own the seats in a car that you own. You’re only a licensee of the PS3 software. Bad analogy.

You own the car seats and the PS3 in exactly the same way.

You don’t own the copyrighted design on the car seats – but that doesn’t give them the right tor cover the seats in black plastic to stop you copying the design.

Incidentally this license business is a red herring.
The s/w license actually increases your rights (compared to your ownership of a book or music CD containing copyrighted material) – it doesn’t take them away – insofar as it may attempt to remove rights it is probably illegal.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

Incidentally this license business is a red herring.
The s/w license actually increases your rights (compared to your ownership of a book or music CD containing copyrighted material) – it doesn’t take them away – insofar as it may attempt to remove rights it is probably illegal.

When geohot exceeded his license, he violated the Copyright Act. How is that a red herring?

If Sony injured their consumers because they breached warranty or something like that, the remedy is in the courts. You don’t get to violate the Copyright Act because somebody purportedly breached warranty.

The argument that geohot’s hacking was OK because of the warranty issue is the red herring.

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